Security Assurances Prompt UN To Resume Repatriating Afghans From Pakistan
The United Nations refugee agency will next week resume repatriating refugees to Afghanistan from Pakistan, three months
after one of its staff members was murdered.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) announced today it expects to help about 400,000 refugees return from
Pakistan this year – on top of the 1.9 million who have already made the trip and a further 660,000 who have returned to
Afghanistan from Iran.
Returning refugees are given food, a small travel grant and some supplies by UNHCR to help them re-adjust to life in
their homeland.
UNHCR spokesman Ron Redmond told reporters today in Geneva that the decision to resume repatriation follows assurances
from the Afghan and Pakistani governments and the introduction of extra security precautions by the agency itself.
UNHCR halted repatriations after staff member Bettina Goislard, a 29-year-old French national, was shot dead in the
Afghan city of Ghazni in November. Mr. Redmond said her murder “followed months of increasing violence against
humanitarian workers in Afghanistan.”
Mr. Redmond said UNHCR has found “significant interest” in repatriation among Afghans living in refugee camps in
Pakistan. Almost half the residents of a camp at Shalman, for example, have expressed a desire to return when the camp
closes next month.